So that's an interesting case. It was flagged as both "not an answer" and spam by different users. It was flagged at a time when there weren't many moderators active on the site, so one of us didn't act on the spam flag.
Instead, it was automatically deleted from review: https://stackoverflow.com/review/low-quality-posts/4952811 after receiving enough delete votes (for being a link-based answer). That deletion immediately validated both the "not an answer" and spam flags.
I would have declined or dismissed the spam flag on that, because this doesn't fit the pattern of traditional spam. It's a user posting a link to an older tutorial, and not an obvious attempt to spam a blog or product. I don't see abusive behavior here.
That said, this still would have become an audit case because of the validated "not an answer" flag on it. We've been instructed to remove "see this tutorial" answers when flagged, and validate the flags on them. While I don't necessarily agree that all such answers should be deleted, the community has spoken and decided these answers are not appropriate here.
I'm a little concerned about audit cases being identified from automatically validated flags in the Low Quality Posts review queue, particularly spam and offensive flags. Perhaps the system should leave those to be acted on by moderators when a post is deleted by a community vote like this. Maybe validation of flags by non-moderator actions shouldn't cause something to be used as an audit case. I don't have the stats to see if this is a real problem, but moderators were instructed to be strict with these flags, and the community doesn't have that kind of guidance.